• ANTH 2285

    Anthropology of Development and Humanitarianism
     Rating

    4.21

     Difficulty

    2.50

     GPA

    3.79

    Last Taught

    Fall 2024

    This course explores anthropological writings on development and humanitarianism to better understand the historical context and contemporary practice of these distinct modes of world saving. We will attend to critiques of development and humanitarianism, and will also consider writings by anthropologists who champion the humanitarian project

  • ANTH 2415

    Language in Human Evolution
     Rating

    4.22

     Difficulty

    2.00

     GPA

    3.81

    Last Taught

    Fall 2025

    Examines the evolution of our capacity for language along with the development of human ways of cooperating in engaged social interaction. Course integrates cognitive, cultural, social, and biological aspects of language in comparative perspective. How is the familiar shape of language today the result of evolutionary and developmental processes involving the form, function, meaning and use of signs and symbols in social ecologies?

  • ANTH 3010

    Theory and History of Anthropology
     Rating

    4.22

     Difficulty

    3.75

     GPA

    3.33

    Last Taught

    Fall 2025

    Overview of the major theoretical positions which have structured anthropological thought over the past century.

  • ANTH 5360

    World Mental Health
     Rating

    4.25

     Difficulty

    1.75

     GPA

    3.83

    Last Taught

    Spring 2025

    This course will examine mental health issues from the perspectives of biomedicine and anthropology, emphasizing local traditions of illness and healing as well as evidence from epidemiology and neurobiology. Included topics will be psychosis, depression, PTSD, Culture Bound Syndromes, and suicide. We will also examine the role of pharmaceutical companies in the spread of western based mental health care and culturally sensitive treatment.

  • ANTH 3332

    Anthropology of Disability
     Rating

    4.33

     Difficulty

    2.00

     GPA

    Last Taught

    Fall 2025

    Disabled people are considered the "world's largest minority," but does a shared disability experience exist? In this course we examine the diverse ways disability is understood in different social contexts. We use disability studies as a critical lens to examine issues of power and to ask key questions of anthropology, including; What does it mean to have an anthropology of embodied experience? An anthropology of the mind?

  • ANTH 3559

    New Course in Anthropology
     Rating

    4.33

     Difficulty

    2.00

     GPA

    3.44

    Last Taught

    Spring 2026

    New course in the subject of Anthropology.

  • ANTH 2590

    Social and Cultural Anthropology
     Rating

    4.40

     Difficulty

    2.00

     GPA

    3.57

    Last Taught

    Spring 2025

    Topics to be announced prior to each semester, dealing with social and cultural anthropology.

  • ANTH 3020

    Using Anthropology
     Rating

    4.44

     Difficulty

    2.00

     GPA

    3.61

    Last Taught

    Spring 2026

    The theoretical, methodological and ethical practice of an engaged anthropology is the subject of this course, We begin with a history of applied anthropology. We then examine case studies that demonstrate the unique practices of contemporary sociocultural, linguistic, archaeological and bioanthropological anthropology in the areas of policy and civic engagement.

  • ANTH 2250

    Nationalism, Racism, Multiculturalism
     Rating

    4.48

     Difficulty

    2.45

     GPA

    3.52

    Last Taught

    Spring 2025

    Introductory course in which the concepts of culture, multiculturalism, race, racism, and nationalism are critically examined in terms of how they are used and structure social relations in American society and, by comparison, how they are defined in other cultures throughout the world.

  • ANTH 2830

    Ancient Cities of the Americas
     Rating

    4.67

     Difficulty

    1.00

     GPA

    Last Taught

    Fall 2025

    When colonial empires invaded the Americas in the 16th century, Europeans marveled at the Indigenous cities distributed across the continent. This course examines the ancient cities of the Americas: their origins, their configurations, their operations, and their representations. It considers how archaeologists define urbanism among ancient societies, and why not every human settlement qualifies as a city.